The Treaty of Paris between Italy and the Allied Powers was signed on 10 February 1947, formally ending hostilities between both parties.
Article 17 of the treaty banned fascist organisations ("whether political, military, or semi-military") in Italy.
A subsequent annex to the treaty provided for the cultural autonomy of the German minority in South Tyrol.
Article 14 of the treaty ceded the Italian islands in the Aegean to Greece and further stipulated that they "shall be and shall remain demilitarized".
This was eventually inserted in the Paris Peace Treaty of 1947, to which Turkey is not a signatory party.